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ANCIENT EUROPE.

WITH A

VIEW OF THE REVOLUTIONS

IN

ASIA AND AFRICA.

IN A SERIES OF LETTERS

TO A YOUNG NOBLEMAN.

BY WILLIAM RUSSELL, L. L. D.

AUTHOR OF THE HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE.

VOL. II.

PHILADELPHIA:

PRINTED BY H. MAXWELL, COLUMBIA-HOUSE,

FOR WILLIAM YOUNG BIRCH AND ABRAHAM SMALL.

1801.

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THE HISTORY

OF

ANCIENT EUROPE.

UNIV. OF CALIFORNIA

LETTER IX.

THE REVOLUTIONS IN ASIA AND AFRICA, FROM THE SUB-
VERSION OF THE OLD ASSYRIAN EMPIRE TO THE TAKING
OF BABYLON BY CYRUS THE GREAT; WITH A RETRO-
SPECTIVE VIEW OF THE STATE OF SYRIA AND EGYPT,
IN MORE EARLY TIMES.

AFTER the subversion of the Assyrian empire, Cyaxares and Nabocolassar, or Nebuchadnezzar, the warlike kings of Media and Babylon, who had destroyed Nineveh, threatened the whole earth with subjection. The exulting victors immediately reduced to obedience, either conjunctly or separately, all the nations that had, at any time, owned the sway of the haughty monarchs of Assyria'; and extended their

1. The greatness and fall of the Assyrian empire are finely described by the prophet Ezekiel, under the similitude of a tree. "Behold, the “Assyrian was a cedar in Lebanon with fair branches, and with a shadowing

M4.1295

LETTER

IX.

PART I. their dominion from the borders of Egypt, to the frontiers of India.

In the prosecution of these conquests, Nebuchadnezzar directed his arms chiefly against the nations to the west of the Euphrates, and Cyaxares against those to the east of the Tygris; where, after having subdued all the countries in the neighbourhood of the Caspian sea, he chased the Scythians into the wilds of Sarmatia. Concerning the state of the vast regions to the east of the Tygris, at this early period, we have little information, that can be depended on. But the case is very different, in regard to the countries to the west of the Euphrates. There the most interesting spectacles are presented to our view, by historians both sacred and civil, during the century that preceded the destruction of Nineveh.

The Assyrian monarchs, from the foundation of their empire, appear to have claimed dominion, and

"shadowing shroud, and of an high stature, and his top was among "the thick boughs. The waters made him great; the deep set him

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upon high, with her rivers running round about his plants, and sent "out her little rivers unto all the trees of the field. Therefore his "height was exalted above all the trees of the field, and his boughs "were multiplied, and his branches became long, because of the multi"tude of waters, when he shot forth. All the fowls of heaven made "their nests in his boughs, and under his branches did all the "beasts of the field bring forth their young, and under his shadow "dwelt all great nations. Thus was he fair in his greatness, in the "length of his branches; for his root was by great waters" (Ezek.

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chap. xxxi. ver. 3-7.). "But, because his heart is lifted up in his "height," adds the prophet, in the name of the LORD, "I have de“livered him into the hand of the mighty one of the heathen. And strangers, the terrible of the nations, have cut him off. Upon the "mountains, and in all the valleys, his branches are fallen, and his boughs are broken by all the rivers of the land; and all the people "of the earth are gone from under his shadow, and have left him. "In the day when he went down to the grave, I caused a mourning; "when I cast him into the pit, I made the nations shake at the sound "of his fall:" Ezekiel, chap. xxxi. ver. 10-16.

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2. Ancient Univ. Hist. vol. iv. et auct. cit.

latterly

IX.

latterly had rigorously maintained it, over all the LETTER countries between the Euphrates and Nile. These claims descended to Nebuchadnezzar, on the subversion of the Assyrian empire, and the rise of the Baby. lonian grandeur on its ruins. And he did not fail to assert them, or to punish such nations as attempted to dispute his sway. But before I relate the future progress of the arms of this mighty conqueror, whose sword smote so many kingdoms, and the terror of whose name was so great upon the face of the earth, it will be proper to take a retrospective survey of the state of Syria and Egypt.

Under the name of Syria I comprehend, for the sake of perspicuity, the whole country from the Euphrates to the Mediterranean sea, and from the foot of mount Taurus to Arabia Petrea, and the frontiers of Egypt3. From the southern part of this fine country, as I have formerly had occasion to observe', the Israelites or Hebrews, under Joshua, drove the Canaanites of the inland country to the maritime district, afterward known by the name of Phenicia; while they gave to the Land of Promise, or the territory in which they settled, the name of Judea, and the Greeks, that of Palestine. The northern part, or Syria Proper, was chiefly subject to the kings of Damascus; who, like all the other Syrian princes and states, were in some measure dependent on the Assyrian emperors.

747.

Nabonass,

The supine successors of Ninus and Semerimis, Ant. Chr. however, until roused to exertion by the revolt of the Medes and Babylonians (after the lapse of five hundred years), had but imperfectly maintained their

3. Strabo (Geog. lib. xvi.) gives nearly the same extent to Syria; and Herodotus, in more ancient times, talks familiarly of the Syrian Palestine (Historiar. lib. i.), of Azotus in Syria, and of the boundaries between Syria and Egypt. Herodot. lib. ii.

4. Lett. I.

æra 1.

Sovereignty

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